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Weijun Wei, Heather Hardin and Quan-Yong Luo

Introduction
Thyroidcancer is the fifth most common cancer in women in the United States and is the most commonly diagnosed cancer before the age of 30 years among women in China ( Chen et al. 2016 ). Although thyroidcancer is generally

Carles Zafon, Joan Gil, Beatriz Pérez-González and Mireia Jordà

Introduction
Thyroidcancer, the most prevalent endocrine malignancy, covers the full range of phenotypes from indolent to the worst forms of human cancer. It is categorized into differentiated thyroidcancer (DTC), poorly differentiated

Hao Fu, Lin Cheng, Yuchen Jin and Libo Chen

thyroid carcinoma. With globally rising incidence, thyroid carcinoma has attracted much more concern than before.
In theory, thyrotoxicosis with suppressed TSH should lead to a lower incidence of thyroidcancer than that observed in euthyroid patients

Susan J Hsiao and Yuri E Nikiforov

Introduction Among endocrine tumors, thyroidcancer is the most common, with an estimated incidence of 12.2/100 000 per year in the USA ( Howlader et al . 2013 ). The incidence of thyroidcancer, both in the USA and worldwide, has been increasing

, which are caused by a germline mutation and associate with MTC, somatic gene rearrangements of the RET gene are associated with papillary thyroidcancer ( Grieco et al . 1990 ). The incidence of MTC has been reported to vary between 2.5 and 5% among

Introduction
Thyroidcancer is the most common new malignancy diagnosed in the United States. It also carries an expanding global disease burden, in part due to the increased detection of tumors that may otherwise remain asymptomatic and not